In a message dated 2001-09-07 17:19:49 Pacific Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

>  You are quite correct that is why Unicode support differing collation
>  strengths.  Some times you only care about the actual letters without
>  diacritics.  But even then letters are locale sensitive.  For example the
>  Danish alphabet starts with an A and ends it with A ring above.  A Dane
>  would look for Alborg near the end of a list of towns.  It is like having
>  the Spanish ch follow cz.

That would be Ålborg, right?

I hasten to add that Carl's Spanish example is for the so-called "traditional 
sort," in contrast to the "modern sort" in which "ch" sorts simply as "c" 
followed by "h".  In many Spanish-speaking communities, particularly here in 
Alta California, the simplified "modern" sort is by far the more common of 
the two.

-Doug Ewell
 Fullerton, California

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